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Aug 16, 2013
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we saw apple with steve jobs, we saw apple without steve jobs. we saw apple with steve jobs. now we're going to see apple without steve jobs. >> rose: so you're shorting apple? >> i'm not shorting apple. i like tim cook, there are a lot of talented people. >> rose: you just said apple is going down without steve jobs. that's exactly what you said. apple is going down without steve jobs. >> okay, i'll say it publicly. he's irreplaceable. i don't see how they can -- they will not be nearly so successful because he's gone. you can already feel it, he made all the decisions. he ran everything. he made every single decision. i know he loved to share the credit and that's fine, but i'm telling you, he made every single decision. i was there, i watched it. for 25 years. he made every -- he decided how you -- how you paid -- how you checked out of the apple store. he decided where things were in the apple store. he picked the colors of the original imacs. sorry no beige was his. a thousand songs in your pocket was his. >> rose: (laughs) i hear you. >> the name "ipad, i tunes, iphone"
we saw apple with steve jobs, we saw apple without steve jobs. we saw apple with steve jobs. now we're going to see apple without steve jobs. >> rose: so you're shorting apple? >> i'm not shorting apple. i like tim cook, there are a lot of talented people. >> rose: you just said apple is going down without steve jobs. that's exactly what you said. apple is going down without steve jobs. >> okay, i'll say it publicly. he's irreplaceable. i don't see how they can -- they...
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Aug 10, 2013
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steve will no longer be involved in this company. >> 10 years after steve jobs' departure, the future of apple computer is in jeopardy. >> in life you only get to do so many things. we're going to make apple cool again. here's to the crazy ones, the misfits, the rebels. because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do. >> if we're going to do this thing, we need to come up with a name. >> apple. >> that is so much better than laser beam computers. >> rose: i'm pleased to have ashton kutcher at this table for the first time. welcome. great to have you here. >> thanks for having me. >> rose: we share a passion for film and technol at very different levels. steve jobs, just a sense of who the-- the essence of this man who has been on this show as well, but you've said there are few people when they walk into the room, the room is different than the way it was when steve jobs walked into the room. >> i never had the good fortune of meeting him. but i think there's-- there's this-- this iconic understanding of who steve jobs was, and-- which is
steve will no longer be involved in this company. >> 10 years after steve jobs' departure, the future of apple computer is in jeopardy. >> in life you only get to do so many things. we're going to make apple cool again. here's to the crazy ones, the misfits, the rebels. because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do. >> if we're going to do this thing, we need to come up with a name. >> apple. >> that is so much...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Oct 11, 2013
10/13
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as steve well knows. she has a passion for politics and as a policy and i think you'll see her more and more talking about the issues of the day and i think 2014 will be very telling to see what other democrats do. the martin o'malleys, the andrew cuomos. are they going to go forward with their own campaign if they see her out there more and more? >> but there's worry among democrats that she's going to wait too long to decide. she'll be out there talking but they're very worried she's going to try to stay out of technical politics for a long time and that leaves space for a senator elizabeth warren of massachusetts, someone who would be a threat the to get in. >> rose: she's the liberal threat as obama was in 2008. >> i think hillary clinton is going to try to draw a fine line, whether she succeeds or not i can't say and try do her policy stuff more under the guise of the foundation and more outside of washington than getting involved in the mosh pit of what piece of legislation happens to be -- >> rose:
as steve well knows. she has a passion for politics and as a policy and i think you'll see her more and more talking about the issues of the day and i think 2014 will be very telling to see what other democrats do. the martin o'malleys, the andrew cuomos. are they going to go forward with their own campaign if they see her out there more and more? >> but there's worry among democrats that she's going to wait too long to decide. she'll be out there talking but they're very worried she's...
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Jun 5, 2013
06/13
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and i said "yeah, if you could get steve king to write it." he said "i'm steve king's agent." so he called steve and he was interested enough to take a look and i flew down to florida and -- >> rose: there you go. so your reaction was "let's do it"? or did they say something to you that said "oh, yeah"? >> well, you know what? the guy that we're talking about the agent called me up and said "john mellencamp has an idea for a musical." and my reaction to that, zero. flat line. because a lot of people have a lot of ideas and they think, well stephen king would be perfect for this project. and he said "john would actually come down and talk to you because john was in south carolina" which is just a hop. "and i said to my wife "what do you think about this?" and she said "you know, his music reminds me of your stories why don't you go ahead and have a meeting with him?" my wife never says stuff like that. so john came, he told me the story and immediately the dials started to turn up and also at the same time that he was telling me the story he was tuning my guitar which i hadn't
and i said "yeah, if you could get steve king to write it." he said "i'm steve king's agent." so he called steve and he was interested enough to take a look and i flew down to florida and -- >> rose: there you go. so your reaction was "let's do it"? or did they say something to you that said "oh, yeah"? >> well, you know what? the guy that we're talking about the agent called me up and said "john mellencamp has an idea for a...
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Nov 29, 2013
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i worked very closely with bill and steve and others. and it will always have a part of my heart. and it's still an incredibly strong, strong company. it was some great internal values. but i think it's lost its way in a few dimensions. >> rose: well, you should know why. >> it's hard to know why. i think it's a better try say how. one is there's so many different agendas it's working on. >> rose: nathan myhrvold for the hour. next. captioning sponsored by rose communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. >> rose: nathan myhrvold is here. he is the c.e.o. and co-founder of intellectual ventures. for many years he was the chief technology officer at microsoft. he was known as one of the most visionary technology and business leaders anywhere. he is also a culinary pioneer. his newest project is "modernist cuisine" in which he explores the science of cooking. he recently published his third book on the subject. it is called "the photography of modernist cuisine!" it's a visual window into his experiments with food and science and preparation. here is a loo
i worked very closely with bill and steve and others. and it will always have a part of my heart. and it's still an incredibly strong, strong company. it was some great internal values. but i think it's lost its way in a few dimensions. >> rose: well, you should know why. >> it's hard to know why. i think it's a better try say how. one is there's so many different agendas it's working on. >> rose: nathan myhrvold for the hour. next. captioning sponsored by rose communications...
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May 3, 2013
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in this case it's steve cohen. >> rose: let me just nail this down. there's no question that he -- this is a concerted effort by the southern district of new york to go after steve cohen, that he is in person that they want and a lot of what they do is to find a case against him? for some reason, because they think whatever -- that there was a violation of law, they would say? >> i don't think the southern district would say that to you if we were sitting here right now. i don't think he'd say our goal is to get -- >> rose: would he think that? >> i don't think they would say it but it seems clear from the evidence if you look at another guy who was recently indicted, another trader recently indicted i don't think the government would have spent the resources going after this guy if it weren't for the fact that he worked at s.a.c. it's too much pointing there and too many leaks, frankly, to other media outlets about the government's investigation and where it's going. you have leaks that a cooperating witness was saying that he was pressured to develo
in this case it's steve cohen. >> rose: let me just nail this down. there's no question that he -- this is a concerted effort by the southern district of new york to go after steve cohen, that he is in person that they want and a lot of what they do is to find a case against him? for some reason, because they think whatever -- that there was a violation of law, they would say? >> i don't think the southern district would say that to you if we were sitting here right now. i don't...
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Aug 23, 2013
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so steve has-- . >> rose: we know it is not the same. >> apple without steve, in the interim period between when steve got fired and when he came back we know it was not the same. so now apple today, there is a tremendous challenge which is to keep going. but what they have the benefit of this amazing organization which is the other part he did was attracting all these incredible people. >> all these guys, scott, and all these guys. >> and they stayed there too. something ought to be said about that. >> the bench, its bench is incredibly deep there will be some turnover but the bench is very deep. look, if are you at apple you doing the best work, you will probably ever going to do. there is something to be said, you know, these-- this is the greatest thinging underappreciated as a c.e.o.. same as mark zuckerberg, magnet for brilliant people because they will do the best work they will ever do in their lives in this environment. >> larry page a good c.e.o.. >> i think so. >> as good as -- >> newer in the job, early indications are very positive. >> founder. >> c.e.o.. >> yeah, exactly. >> f
so steve has-- . >> rose: we know it is not the same. >> apple without steve, in the interim period between when steve got fired and when he came back we know it was not the same. so now apple today, there is a tremendous challenge which is to keep going. but what they have the benefit of this amazing organization which is the other part he did was attracting all these incredible people. >> all these guys, scott, and all these guys. >> and they stayed there too....
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. >> rose: and you write about steve jobs. >> actually before that, i did write about steve jobs. before that i went to detroit, for a year of battle hardening in 1979 as the automobile industry was collapsing. and it was-- and that was where, actually, i co-authored a book about the chrysler corporation and lee iacocca who was this larger-than-life figure who obviously was a house hold name 25, 30 years ago. and that was my introduction to mainstream journalism. and then i moved to california. first to los angeles. and where i found myself gravitating to northern california to do stories about all these little companies that nobody had heard of, you know, genentech was private. apple was just about public. microsoft was still private company. and i started writing about them and gradually got more interested. and then eventually wound up moving to san francisco with time. >> and what was steve jobs like then? >>. >> it's probably, steve is probably an example of like many, many people, of the truism that you never take the boy out of the man. and so many of the traits that people
. >> rose: and you write about steve jobs. >> actually before that, i did write about steve jobs. before that i went to detroit, for a year of battle hardening in 1979 as the automobile industry was collapsing. and it was-- and that was where, actually, i co-authored a book about the chrysler corporation and lee iacocca who was this larger-than-life figure who obviously was a house hold name 25, 30 years ago. and that was my introduction to mainstream journalism. and then i moved to...
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Nov 29, 2013
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hi, i'm rick steves, and it's christmas time in europe. from manger scenes to mistletoe from norway to rome, we're celebrating all over the
hi, i'm rick steves, and it's christmas time in europe. from manger scenes to mistletoe from norway to rome, we're celebrating all over the
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Apr 22, 2013
04/13
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bill gates or steve jobs? >> oh, both. both. >> both but for somewhat different reasons. with bill gates you'll remember him as a great philanthropist now in addition to everything else he's done but bill gates was utterly instrumental. let's put it this way, steve jobs commercialized and popularized -- he didn't invent it, but he popularize it had personal computer then he reinvented the way you use the personalal computer with the mac. but bill gates -- without bill gates and jobs himself said this at the joint interview that bill gates wouldn't have had the p.c. software industry >> he's the henry ford of it. >> he made it more popular. >> it's like henry ford, thomas edison. >> rose: along with andy grove. >> jeff bezos, larry page and sergei bryn, steve jobs, even larry ellisson, henry ford, thomas edison -- >> rose: i know, but the reason i asked the question is someone smart, i can't remember who, this is the reason i ask, said to me, look, a hundred years from now they're going to remember bill gates more than they remember steve jobs, i promise you because of wha
bill gates or steve jobs? >> oh, both. both. >> both but for somewhat different reasons. with bill gates you'll remember him as a great philanthropist now in addition to everything else he's done but bill gates was utterly instrumental. let's put it this way, steve jobs commercialized and popularized -- he didn't invent it, but he popularize it had personal computer then he reinvented the way you use the personalal computer with the mac. but bill gates -- without bill gates and jobs...
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Aug 15, 2013
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a eulogy and steve's memorial. i think it was how reflective he is and how he can look around his home or his homes or he can go to oracle and see all of these a lyndry cal buildings and think 120,000 people this company employs. how did my life, this little kid from the south side of chicago, adoptive parents, how did i get here? so i think sometimes he pauses and looks at his life with detached wonder. >> rose: he looks at his father who he says was a conformist and everything is he said is not about conforming. >> rose: he and steve jobs are the different ones and there's a great scene in the book about president two walking around the grounds of his woodside property and they're talking about who's the greatest human being ever. who left the biggest impact? >> rose: did they decide who it was? >> they did. it was a very interesting thing because steve jobs, he thought gandhi, which you might imagine and larry said napoleon. and not because of the great war victories but because of all that napoleon did, yes, th
a eulogy and steve's memorial. i think it was how reflective he is and how he can look around his home or his homes or he can go to oracle and see all of these a lyndry cal buildings and think 120,000 people this company employs. how did my life, this little kid from the south side of chicago, adoptive parents, how did i get here? so i think sometimes he pauses and looks at his life with detached wonder. >> rose: he looks at his father who he says was a conformist and everything is he...
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Aug 20, 2013
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steve, what do you got? >> well, i gotta say, when you said, "i'm doing something special with plates and sticks." you are next to two asians. and they assumed you were probably eating. [ laughter ] so, that's a let-down. [ laughter ] just for the sole fact that i heard she's a spinner. and i thought something else. i'm gonna say no meal. i'm sorry. >> jay: no meal! >> no meal! [ audience aws ] no meal! [ audience booing ] >> jay: alec? >> well, you're looking for a a job. well, if you can do that while spinning yourself around a a pole, you'll have a job in no time. [ laughter ] in the meantime, have a meal! >> jay: a meal! [ cheers and applause ] all right -- let's see how this sisterhood thing works out. kathleen? >> this is what people did before cable. [ laughter ] "i'm so bored i'm going to go in the kitchen and spin stuff with my feet." i couldn't do it, so i say meal. >> jay: meal! [ cheers and applause ] let's see what the meal is. here we are. oh! dinner for four at planet dailies l.a. and the farm
steve, what do you got? >> well, i gotta say, when you said, "i'm doing something special with plates and sticks." you are next to two asians. and they assumed you were probably eating. [ laughter ] so, that's a let-down. [ laughter ] just for the sole fact that i heard she's a spinner. and i thought something else. i'm gonna say no meal. i'm sorry. >> jay: no meal! >> no meal! [ audience aws ] no meal! [ audience booing ] >> jay: alec? >> well, you're...
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Nov 22, 2013
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steve jobs. he is behind the designs for the i mac, ipod, i phones, and ios 7 the latest-- the it has helped apple sell millions of its products around the world. newson's range as a design is unparalleled, so much so that the "new york times" once asked, is there anything marc newson has not designedment his lockheed lounge chair has set world records at auctions. ive and newson have both redefined the boundaries between art and design, form and function. their work has been featured in museums and earned them countless awards. we talk with jony and marc about the auction, their craft, and their friendship. >> define for me what this exhibit is about? >> what-- in terms of the collection of objects, it was actually quite simple. it is a group of objects, each of them we both liked. and we had quite a clear criteria that we wanted them to be pieces of design, so they're all functional. and they're all capable of being made in volume, you know, en masse. but really it came down to objects that we,
steve jobs. he is behind the designs for the i mac, ipod, i phones, and ios 7 the latest-- the it has helped apple sell millions of its products around the world. newson's range as a design is unparalleled, so much so that the "new york times" once asked, is there anything marc newson has not designedment his lockheed lounge chair has set world records at auctions. ive and newson have both redefined the boundaries between art and design, form and function. their work has been featured...
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Feb 26, 2013
02/13
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but there is no sign anybody is ready to do this. >> rose: thank you, steve, steve rattner, back in a moment. stay with us. 50 years of feminism is investigated by a new documentary called makers: women who make america. it covers a number of landmarks both positive and negative in the fight for equality. the publication of the feminism mystique by better fern and, the founder of ms magazine by gloria steinem and failure of the equal rights amendment it also tells us stories of every day women such as catherine switzer, the first woman to run the boston marathon. here is a look at the the trailer. >> honey, when was the last time you baked a cake. >> last week, dear. >> i was brought up in the betty crocker era. you had to get married and you had to have a child. >> that's what it was about, to meet the guy, to get married, to have babies, to be the president of the pta. i can't even stand going back to thinking about those days, what it was like for women. did i ever fake an orgasm, you bet i faked one. >> every place i went for interviews the only thing they wanted to know was can y
but there is no sign anybody is ready to do this. >> rose: thank you, steve, steve rattner, back in a moment. stay with us. 50 years of feminism is investigated by a new documentary called makers: women who make america. it covers a number of landmarks both positive and negative in the fight for equality. the publication of the feminism mystique by better fern and, the founder of ms magazine by gloria steinem and failure of the equal rights amendment it also tells us stories of every day...